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Question 1
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Regarding fat digestion, which of the following statements is CORRECT:
Your Answer: Chylomicrons are exocytosed from enterocytes to enter lacteals and thus the lymphatic system.
Explanation:Dietary fat is chiefly composed of triglycerides (esters of free fatty acids and glycerol which may be saturated or unsaturated). The essential fatty acids are linoleic acid and alpha-linoleic acid, which cannot be manufactured in the body. Dietary fat provides 37 kJ (9 kcal) of energy per gram. Fats are digested almost entirely in the small intestine and are only released from the stomach into the duodenum at the rate at which they can be digested.
Pancreatic lipase is the most significant enzyme for fat digestion. In the duodenum fat is emulsified by bile acids, a process where larger lipid droplets are broken down into much smaller droplets providing a greater surface area for enzymatic digestion. Micelles are arranged so that hydrophobic lipid molecules lie in the centre, surrounded by bile acids arranged such the outer region is hydrophilic. Dietary and synthesised lipids are incorporated into chylomicrons in the Golgi body, which are exocytosed from the basolateral membrane to enter lacteals and thus the lymphatic system. -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Gastrointestinal
- Physiology
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Question 2
Correct
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A 25-year-old guy who has had a knee-high plaster cast on his left leg for the past 5 weeks arrives at the emergency department complaining of numbness on the dorsum of his left foot and an inability to dorsiflex or evert his foot. You know that his symptoms are due to fibular nerve compression. Where is the fibular nerve located?
Your Answer: Neck of fibula
Explanation:Dorsiflexion and eversion of the foot are innervated by the deep fibular nerve and the superficial fibular nerve, respectively.
The common fibular nerve runs obliquely downward along the lateral border of the popliteal fossa (medial to the biceps femoris) before branching at the neck of the fibula.
Thus, it is prone to being affected during an impact injury or fracture to the bone or leg. Casts that are placed too high can also compress the fibular nerve.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Lower Limb
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Question 3
Incorrect
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A 10-year-old girl presents with polyuria, polydipsia, and stomach pain. She has a history of type I diabetes mellitus. On blood gas analysis, she has metabolic acidosis. Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is diagnosed, and therapy is initiated. She becomes increasingly confused when intravenous fluids and insulin are administered.
Which electrolyte imbalance is the MOST likely reason of the increased confusion
Your Answer: Hypokalaemia
Correct Answer: Hyponatraemia
Explanation:Because of the shift of water from the intracellular to the extracellular compartment as a result of hyperglycaemia and increased plasma osmolality, dilutional hyponatraemia is common in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA).
If intravenous fluids are not delivered with caution, hyponatraemia might worsen, which can lead to increased degrees of disorientation. Hyponatraemia has also been linked to an increased risk of cerebral oedema, especially if blood glucose levels drop too quickly following treatment.
Headache, recurrence of vomiting, irritability, Glasgow Coma Scale score, inappropriate heart rate slowing, and rising blood pressure are the most common causes of death in paediatric DKA, and children should be monitored for the symptoms mentioned above. To prevent this from developing, s low osmolarity normalization, attention to glucose and salt levels, as well as hydration over 48 hours, is necessary.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Musculoskeletal Pharmacology
- Pharmacology
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Question 4
Incorrect
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You review an 18-months-old child who seems to be having a reaction following an immunisation she took earlier in the day.
Which statement concerning immunity and vaccination is true?Your Answer: Vaccination induces passive adaptive immunity
Correct Answer: The strongest immunological response is seen with natural immunity
Explanation:Vaccination induces ACTIVE adaptive immunity. Actively acquired immunity involves the development of an immune response either due to vaccination or natural exposure to a pathogen and leads to long-lasting resistance to infection.
Immediate protection is achieved with injection of immunoglobulin. The protection is transient lasting only a few weeks and is useful as post-exposure prophylaxis.
Passively acquired immunity usually leads to short-lasting resistance to infection because it does not involve a host immune response.
With inactivated bacteria, a series of primary vaccinations is usually required to induce an adequate immune response. In most cases, boosters are required to sustain adequate immunity.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- General Pathology
- Pathology
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Question 5
Correct
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Question 6
Correct
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Most of the lymph from vessels that drain the breast is collected in which of the following lymph nodes?
Your Answer: Axillary nodes
Explanation:Lymph is the fluid that flows through the lymphatic system.
Axillary lymph nodes are near the breasts. They are often the first location to which breast cancer spreads if it moves beyond the breast tissue. They receive approximately 75% of lymph drainage from the breast via lymphatic vessels, laterally and superiorly.
The lymph usually first drains to the anterior axillary nodes, and from here, through the central axillary, apical, and supraclavicular nodes in sequence.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Upper Limb
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Question 7
Correct
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Regarding the trachea, which of the following statements is INCORRECT:
Your Answer: A cricothyrotomy involves making an opening in the neck inferior to the cricoid cartilage.
Explanation:A cricothyrotomy involves making an opening in the median cricothyroid ligament (the medial part of the cricothyroid membrane), between the cricoid cartilage below and the thyroid cartilage above.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Anatomy
- Head And Neck
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Question 8
Correct
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A critically ill 48-year-old individual appears with symptoms and signs of an anaphylactic reaction.
In an allergic reaction, which of the following is an absolute contraindication to the injection of adrenaline?Your Answer: None of the other options
Explanation:Even if the following relevant contraindications exist, adrenaline can be given in life-threatening anaphylactic reactions:
Coronary artery disease (CAD)
Coronary artery disease (CAD) Second stage of labour
Hypertension that is uncontrolled
Severe Ventricular arrhythmias -
This question is part of the following fields:
- Pharmacology
- Respiratory Pharmacology
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Question 9
Correct
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A 20-year-old male receives a small cut over his hand while climbing a fence causing it to bleed. Upon applying pressure for a few minutes, the bleeding stops. Which one of the following physiological components of the blood is responsible for the primary haemostasis reaction, such as in this case?
Your Answer: Platelet plug formation
Explanation:Haemostasis is your body’s defence against an injury that causes bleeding. It stops bleeding in three main steps:
1) Primary haemostasis – formation of a weak platelet plug
– The primary reaction of the body is to cause local vasoconstriction at the site of injury and decrease blood flow to the affected area
– the release of cytokines and inflammatory markers lead to adhesion of platelets and aggregation at the site of injury forming a platelet plug
– the injured vessel wall has exposed subendothelial collagen that releases von Willebrand factorAny damage to the vessel wall causes the release of the Von Willebrand factor, which is necessary for platelet adhesion. Tissue Thromboplastin is also released, which activates the coagulation pathway, a component of secondary haemostasis. The coagulation cascade ultimately results in the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin.
2) Secondary haemostasis
3) FibrinolysisFibrin (factor Ia) is a long, thin protein with branches produced at the end of the coagulation cascade when fibrinogen (factor I) is converted to fibrin, which stabilizes the blood clot.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- General Pathology
- Pathology
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Question 10
Incorrect
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Which of the following organelles form lysosomes?
Your Answer: The cytoplasm
Correct Answer: The Golgi apparatus
Explanation:Lysosomes are formed by the Golgi apparatus or the endoplasmic reticulum. Lysosome releases its enzymes and digests the cell when the cell dies.
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This question is part of the following fields:
- Basic Cellular Physiology
- Physiology
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